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Church creates Connectional Table to lead general agency work


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Thu, 6 May 2004 15:40:59 -0500

May 6, 2004   GC04-083

By Tim Tanton*

PITTSBURGH (UMNS)-The United Methodist Church has decided to create a
"Connectional Table" to guide the work of the denomination's general
agencies.

The Connectional Table that was approved May 5 by delegates to the church's
General Conference is substantially different from the model proposed by the
denomination's General Council on Ministries.

The legislative committee that processed the Council on Ministries proposal
essentially set that plan aside and came up with an alternate Connectional
Table that is smaller and, according to proponents of the new model, less
costly.

Delegates in the full assembly voted to adopt the General Administration
Committee's proposal and not that of the Council on Ministries.

The new Connectional Table will begin operating next Jan. 1 - two years
sooner than the date in the Council on Ministries' proposal. The Council on
Ministries will go out of existence at the end of a transition period.

The table will have 47 members, compared with about 130 in the council's
proposal. 

The Rev. Deborah McLeod, Florida, who presented the successful proposal, said
the new table would be holistic, collaborative, diverse and functional. "It's
a small table, and it will work."

The General Administration Committee's goal was not to create a new general
agency, she said. "We do not see this as one giant super agency. It is a
place for collaboration, conversation and decision."

Bishop Edward Paup, president of the Council of Ministries, urged the
delegates to adopt the original proposal, known as "Living Into the Future."
"We have believed through this process that there is a disconnect at the
general church level, especially between decisions made about our resources,
our money, and decisions made about our ministry and mission."

The "Living Into the Future" plan would have combined the functions of the
Council on Ministries and the Council on Finance and Administration, bringing
mission and money to the same table, and both agencies would have gone out of
existence. Paup said the other proposal "does not connect the connection."

Under the successful proposal, the Council on Finance and Administration will
remain intact.

The new table's members will consist of:
7	28 people elected through jurisdictional and central conferences. One
will come from each of the seven central conferences - regional units of the
church in Africa, Asia and Europe - and a total of 21 will come from the five
U.S. jurisdictional conferences. The jurisdictional members are to represent
the proportionate membership of each jurisdiction based on combined clergy
and lay membership. 
7	An "effective bishop," selected by the Council of Bishops. The bishop
will be the chairperson of the table.
7	The presidents of most of the church's general agencies: the Board of
Church and Society, Board of Discipleship, Board of Global Ministries, Board
of Higher Education and Ministry, Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns, Commission on Religion and Race, Commission on the
Status and Role of Women, Commission on United Methodist Men, Commission on
Communications, Commission on Archives and History, and Council on Finance
and Administration.
7	One youth and one young adult from the new Division on Ministries
with Young People.
7	A member from each of the denomination's racial-ethnic caucuses.
7	The general secretaries of the agencies named above, as well as the
general secretary of the Board of Pension and Health Benefits and the
president and publisher of the United Methodist Publishing House. The general
secretaries and Publishing House president will have voice but not vote.

The new table is to be half laity, half clergy; half female, half male; not
less than 30 percent members of racial-ethnic minority groups (excluding
central conference members) and at least 10 percent youth and young adults.

The Connectional Table will determine its own internal structure and staff
needs. 

The United Methodist Church has undertaken a series of studies on
restructuring over the years. The 2000 General Conference directed the
Council on Ministries to take five "transformation directions" from a
previous study, work on them and report back in 2004. The council's primary
focus during the past four years was on developing the "Living Into the
Future" proposal.

General Conference meets every four years. Nearly 1,000 delegates from around
the world are meeting April 27-May 7 to conduct the assembly's business on
behalf of the 10 million-member denomination. 

# # #

*Tanton is manging editor of United Methodist News Service.

News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference, April 27-May 7.
After May 10: (615) 742-5470. 

 
 

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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